The decisions of the highest court of a state upon the question
whether a particular act was passed in such manner as to become,
under the state constitution, a law should be accepted and followed
by the federal courts.
The principle reaffirmed that the recital in municipal bonds of
a wrong act as authority for their being issued does not preclude a
holder of such bond from showing that independently of such act
there was power to issue the bonds.
The rule reaffirmed that the question arising in a suit in a
federal court of the power of a municipal corporation under
existing laws to make negotiable securities is to be determined by
the law as judicially declared by the highest court of the state at
the time the securities were issued, and that the rights and
obligations of parties accruing under such a state of the law would
not be affected by a different course of judicial decisions
subsequently rendered any more than by subsequent legislation.
The ultimate question in this case is whether the County of
Wilkes, North Carolina, is liable upon certain bonds issued in 1889
in payment of a subscription in its name to the capital stock of
the North Western North Carolina Railroad Company.
Each bond was in the usual form of such instruments, was made
payable October 1, 1913, and recited that it was
"one of a series of one hundred bonds of the denomination of one
thousand dollars each, issued by authority of an act of the General
Assembly of North Carolina, ratified the 20th day of February, A.D.
1879, entitled"
"An Act to Amend the Charter of the North Western North Carolina
Railroad for the Construction of a Second Division from the Towns
of Winston and Salem, in Forsyth County, up the Yadkin Valley, by
Wilkesboro, to Patterson's Factory, Caldwell County,"
"and authorized by a vote of a majority of the qualified voters
of Wilkes County, by an election regularly held for that purpose on
the 6th day of
Page 180 U. S. 507
November, A.D. 1888, and by an order of the Board of
Commissioners of Wilkes County made on the first day of April, A.D.
1889. This series of bonds is issued to pay the subscription on one
hundred thousand dollars made to the capital stock of the North
Western North Carolina Railroad Company by said County of
Wilkes."
The question of a subscription by Wilkes County to the extent of
$100,000 to the stock of that company, to be paid in bonds, was
submitted to a popular vote, and a majority of the qualified voters
approved of the proposition. Taxes were imposed and collected for
eight years to pay the interest on the bonds, and the amounts
collected were so applied, but the county officers refused to pay
the interest due and payable April 1, 1896, April 1, 1898, and
October 1, 1898, although they had in their hands moneys collected
from taxpayers for that purpose. The object of the present suit was
to compel those officers to apply the moneys so collected in
payment of such interest.
Was the act of 1879, which was recited in the bonds as authority
for their being issued, passed by the legislature in such manner as
to become a law of North Carolina? Was there power to issue the
bonds without the aid of that enactment? These are the principal
matters involved in or depending upon our answer to the certified
questions.
The material facts upon which the decision of the case depends
are as follows:
The Convention that assembled at Raleigh, North Carolina, on
January 14, 1868, for the purpose of framing a constitution for
that state concluded its labors on March 16 of the same year. The
Constitution adopted by that body was ratified April 24, 1868, and
was approved by Congress June 25, 1868. 15 Stat. 73, c. 70.
A few days prior to its final adjournments, namely, on the 9th
day of March, 1868, the convention passed an ordinance (which, by
its terms, was to take effect from its passage) that constituted
the charter of the North Western North Carolina Railroad Company.
The company was incorporated by the ordinance for the purpose of
constructing a railroad of one or more tracks
Page 180 U. S. 508
from some point on the North Carolina Railroad between the Town
of Greensboro in Guilford County and the Town of Lexington in
Davidson County, running by way of Salem and Winston in Forsyth
County "to
some point
in the northwestern boundary
line of the state
to be hereafter determined."
By the 5th section of the ordinance, it was provided that, after
the organization of the company, its officers should proceed
"to locate the
eastern terminus of the North Western
North Carolina Railroad, and shall proceed to construct said road,
with one or more tracks, as speedily as practicable, in sections of
five miles each, to the towns of Winston and Salem, in Forsyth
County, which portion of said railroad, when completed, shall
constitute its
first division."
By the 12th section, it was declared that
"all
counties or towns subscribing stock to said
company shall do so in
the same manner and
under the
same rules, regulations, and restrictions as are set forth and
prescribed in the act incorporating the North Carolina &
Atlantic Railroad Company, for the government of such towns and
counties as are now allowed to subscribe to the capital stock of
said company,"
and by section 13 that
"the company shall have power to construct branches of said
road, one of which shall run from the towns of Winston and Salem by
way of Mount Airy, in Surry County, to the line of the State of
Virginia."
The North Carolina & Atlantic Railroad Company referred to
in the 12th section was the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad
Company incorporated by an act of assembly approved December 27,
1852. By the 33d section of the charter of that company, it was
declared to
"be lawful for any incorporated town or county near or through
which said railroad may pass to subscribe for such an amount of
stock in said company as they shall be authorized to do by the
inhabitants of said town or the citizens of said county, in manner
and form as hereinafter provided."
Provision was made (§ 34) in the same act to take the sense
of the qualified voters of any town or county upon the question of
a subscription by it to the stock of the company, and it was
declared (§ 35) that, if a majority of the qualified voters of
any county or town voting upon
Page 180 U. S. 509
the question were in favor of the subscription, the corporate
authorities of the town and the justices of the county should
appoint an agent to make the subscription in behalf of such town
and county, to "be paid for
in the bonds of such town and
county, and on such time as shall be agreed on by said town
officers and the justices of such county." Laws North Carolina,
1852, pp. 484, 499.
By an act of assembly of August 11, 1868, the ordinance of March
9, 1868, was reenacted, ratified, and confirmed. By the same act
also, the commissioners of Forsyth County were invested with
authority to levy from time to time such tax as was sufficient to
pay the subscriptions made to the capital stock of the North
Western North Carolina Railroad Company, and any interest due
thereon, or to liquidate any debt created in borrowing money to pay
the subscription of stock. At the end of that act as published are
the words, "Ratified the 11th day of August, A.D. 1868."
By the first section of the above Act of February 20, 1879, it
was declared that
"section 13 of chapter 17 of the ordinance of the Convention of
1868, ratified the 9th day of March, 1868, be amended by adding the
words 'and one of which shall be constructed from the Town of
Winston and Salem, up the valley of the Yadkin by the way of
Jonesville
and Wilkesboro, in the County of Wilkes, to
Patterson's Factory, in the County of Caldwell, which branch shall
be known as the
second division.'"
By the first and second sections, the ordinance of 1868 was
further amended in particulars that need not be mentioned. By the
fourth section, it was provided:
"That any township or city, town, county, or other municipal
corporation of this state shall have power and authority to
subscribe for and take any number of shares of capital stock of
said company that a majority of the voters of such township or
city, town, county, or other municipal corporation may elect to
take therein."
After prescribing the mode in which the will of the people as to
a subsection of stock should be ascertained, that section
proceeded:
"If the result of any such election shall show that a majority
of the qualified voters of any township or city, town, county, or
other municipal corporation, favor the taking of the amount of
stock
Page 180 U. S. 510
so voted for in such election, then the authorities who, by this
act, are empowered to determine what amount of stock shall be taken
shall subscribe the amount of stock so voted for in said company,
and shall have power to levy and collect taxes for the special
purpose to pay for the said stock in installments as the same may
become due, or, in case it shall not be deemed best to collect
taxes to pay by taxation such subscription for stock, then such
township or city, town, county, or other municipal corporation
shall have power to issue bonds for the purpose of raising money to
pay for such subscription, and shall provide for the payment of
interest upon such bonds, and also for the payment of said bonds
when they become due. . . ."
At the close of that act, as published, are these words: "Read
three times in the General Assembly and ratified the 20th day of
February, A.D. 1879."
Another act was passed March 2, 1881. By that act, the North
Western North Carolina Railroad Company was authorized to extend
and construct its line of road, or a branch thereof, to commence at
or near Winston, in the County of Forsyth, through the Counties of
Forsyth, Davidson, Yadkin, Davie, Rowan, and Iredell, or any or
either of them, to Statesville, or some other point on the Western
North Carolina Railroad, and to build and operate additional
branches thereto, or from its present main line, to any important
mines or manufactories in any of said counties, or counties
adjacent to them, and any corporation, county, city, town, or
township interested therein was empowered to subscribe to stock for
those purposes, or otherwise contribute to the work in such manner
and amount as should be determined by the proper authorities of
such corporation, county, city, town, or township, and agreed on
with the said North Western North Carolina Railroad Company. At the
close of that act as published are the words: "In the General
Assembly, read three times and ratified this 2d day of March, A.D.
1881."
The validity under the Constitution of the state of each of the
above acts of March 11, 1868, February 20, 1879, and March 2, 1881,
was questioned upon grounds presently to be stated.
Page 180 U. S. 511
In the circuit court, judgment was rendered in favor of the
plaintiffs, Coler & Co., who were found to be
bona
fide holders for value of some of the bonds. The case was
carried to the circuit court of appeals, and is now here upon
questions certified under the Judiciary Act of March 3, 1891, 26
Stat. 826, c. 517.
The certified questions are as follows:
"1. Whether, upon the averment of the bill of complaint,
answers, replications, orders, exhibits, and other evidence, and
matters and things recited herein, the circuit court of the United
States was bound in passing upon this case by the decisions of the
Supreme Court of North Carolina in the following cases:
Wilkes
County v. Call, 123 N.C. 308;
Bank v. Commissioners,
119 N.C. 214;
Commissioners v. Snuggs, 121 N.C. 394;
Rodman v. Washington, 122 N.C. 39;
Commissioners v.
Payne, 123 N.C. 432, considered in connection with prior
decisions of said court and the following provisions of the
Constitution of said state: Article 2, sections 14 and 16, and
article 5, sections 1, 4, 6, and 7, and article 7, section 7."
"2. Whether, if the bonds and coupons in question were issued,
put in circulation, and came to the hands of complainants,
appellees, in due course of trade, for valuable consideration and
without notice, and if there were at that time on decision of the
Supreme Court of North Carolina adverse to these bonds or identical
bonds issued under similar statutes, the bonds held by complainants
are valid bonds."
"3. Whether there was any decision adverse to the validity of
these bonds or identical bonds or any construction of the
Constitution or law of North Carolina which affected the question
of their validity when they came in due course of trade and for
valuable consideration and without notice other than such notice as
the parties are assumed to have of existing provisions in the
Constitution and statutes of the State of their invalidity. "
Page 180 U. S. 512
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts as above reported,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This being the case disclosed by the record, we proceed in our
examination of such matters involved in the certified questions as
are presented with sufficient distinctness to require notice at our
hands.
The county insists that the bonds in question were issued in
violation of the 14th section of Article 2 of the Constitution of
the state, which is in these words:
"No law shall be passed to raise money on the credit of the
state, or to pledge the faith of the state, directly or indirectly,
for the payment of any debt, or to impose any tax upon the people
of the state, or allow the counties, cities, or towns to do so,
unless the bill for the purpose shall have been read three several
times in each house of the General Assembly, and passed three
several readings, which readings shall have been on three different
days, and agreed to be each house respectively,
and unless
the yeas and nays on the
second and
third reading of
the bill shall have been
entered on the journal."
In support of the above proposition, reliance is placed upon the
cases named in the first of the certified questions.
We are asked whether the circuit court was bound to follow those
decisions when considered in connection with prior decisions of the
Supreme Court of North Carolina and with the above and other
provisions of the state constitution, by one of which it is
declared that
"each house shall keep a journal of its proceedings, which shall
be printed and made public immediately after the adjournment of the
General Assembly."
Art. 2, § 16.
Page 180 U. S. 513
Premising that the journals of the two houses were put in
evidence, and that it did not appear therefrom that the yeas and
nays, on the second and third readings of the acts of 1868, 1879,
and 1881, respectively, were entered on the legislative journals,
let us inquire as to the scope of the decisions in the above
cases.
In
Bank v. Commissioners, 119 N.C. 214, 220 (1896),
which involved the validity under the 14th section of the state
constitution of an act passed in 1891 authorizing a municipal
subscription to the stock of a railroad company and the issuing of
bonds in payment thereof, it was said:
"This section of the Constitution is imperative and not
recommendatory, and must be observed; otherwise this wise and
necessary precaution inserted in the organic law would be converted
into a nullity by judicial construction. . . . The point is one of
transcending importance, and is simply whether the people, in their
organic law, can safeguard the taxpayers against the creation of
state, county, and town indebtedness by formalities not required
for ordinary legislation, and must the courts and the legislature
respect those provisions? This safeguard is section 14 of Article 2
of the Constitution. . . . The journals offered in evidence showed
affirmatively that 'the yeas and nays on the second and third
reading of the bill' were not 'entered on the journal.' And the
Constitution, the supreme law, says that, unless so entered, no law
authorizing state, counties, cities, or towns to pledge the faith
of the state or to impose any tax upon the people, etc., shall be
valid. . . . The people had the power to protect themselves by
requiring in the organic law something further as to acts
authorizing the creation of bonded indebtedness by the state and
its counties, cities and towns than the fact certified by the
speakers of three readings in each house, and ratification. This
organic "
brk:
provision plainly requires, for the validity of this class of
legislation,
in addition to the certificates of the
speakers, which is sufficient for ordinary legislation, the entry
of the yeas and nays on the journals on the second and third
reading in each house. It is provided that such laws are "no laws,"
i.e., are void unless the bill for the purpose shall have
been read three several times in each house
Page 180 U. S. 514
of the General Assembly and passed three several readings, which
readings shall have been on three different days, and agreed to by
each house respectively,
and unless the yeas and nays on the
second and third reading of the bill shall have been entered on the
journal. This is a clear declaration of the nullity of such
legislation unless this is done, and every holder of a state or
municipal bond is conclusively fixed with notice of this
requirement as an essential to the validity of his bond. If he buys
without ascertaining that constitutional authority to issue the
bond has thus been given, he has only himself to blame. 1
Dill.Mun.Corp. 545, and cases cited. It is certainly in the power
of the sovereign people, in framing their Constitution, to require
as a prerequisite for the validity of this class of legislation
these precautions and the additional evidence in the journals that
they have been complied with, over and above the mere certificate
of the speakers which is sufficient for other legislation. That the
organic law does require the additional forms and the added
evidence of the journals is plain beyond power of controversy. . .
. The certificate of the speakers is not good for more than it
certified,
i.e., that the bill has been read three times
in each house and ratified. And ordinarily that makes the bill a
law. But
for this class of legislation, the Constitution
provides that the facts thus certified by the speakers will make no
law unless it further appears that the yeas and nays have been
recorded on the journals on the second and third reading in each
house. The Constitution makes the entry on the journals essential
to the validity of the act.
These principles were again announced in
Commissioners v.
Snuggs, 121 N.C. 394, 398 (1897), which also involved the
validity of county bonds issued in payment of a subscription to the
capital stock of a railroad corporation. It appeared that the act
relied on as authority for issuing them passed its third reading in
the house of representatives without any entry on the journal of
the yeas and nays. The court said:
"We are of the opinion that it was competent to introduce the
house journal as proof that the acts referred to were not passed
according to the requirements of the constitution, and they
established
Page 180 U. S. 515
that fact. That provision of the Constitution (section 14 of
Article 2) is mandatory, as we have decided in
Bank v.
Commissioners, 119 N.C. 214. It is the protection which the
people, in convention, have thrown around themselves for the
benefit of the minority as well as of the majority. . . . The bill
may, in point of fact, have been read three several times and on
three different days, and the yeas and mays may have been actually
called on the second and third readings and the presiding officers
may have certified thereto, and yet, if the entry of the yeas and
nays is not actually made on the journal, the Constitution,
speaking with absolute clearness, says that the failure of such
entry is absolutely fatal to the validity of the act. The entry,
showing who voted on the bill and how they voted, must be made
before the bill can ever become a law. The Constitution does not
allow the certificate of the presiding officers or any other power
to cure such an omission. The certificate of these officers will be
taken as conclusive of the several readings in ordinary
legislation, even if it could be made to appear that the journals
were silent in reference thereto, because, in ordinary legislation,
the directions of the Constitution are not a condition precedent to
the validity of the act. But, in that class of legislation the
purpose of which is to legislate under section 14 of Article 2 of
the Constitution, a literal compliance with the language of that
section is a condition precedent, and one which must be performed
in its entirety before the bill can ever become a law."
These two decisions were followed in
Rodman v.
Washington, 122 N.C. 39, 41 (1898), and
Commissioners v.
Payne, 123 N.C. 432, 487 (1898).
The same question arose in
Wilkes County v. Call, 123
N.C. 308, 310 (1898). That case involved the validity of the
identical issue of bonds that are here in suit. Referring to its
former decisions, above cited, the court said:
"Under the authority of those decisions, we are compelled to
hold that the entire issue of these bonds is null and void for want
of legislative authority. An act of the legislature passed in
violation of the constitution of the state, or in disregard to its
mandatory provisions, is to the extent of such repugnance
Page 180 U. S. 516
absolutely void, and all bonds issued thereunder bear the brand
of illegality stamped upon their face by the hand of the law. The
act under which these bonds profess to have been issued [the above
act of February 20, 1879] was never legally passed, and never
became a law."
To the above cases we may add that of
State v.
Patterson, 98 N.C. 660, 662, 664, determined in 1887 before
the bonds in question were issued. That was an indictment for
selling spirituous liquors in a certain county wherein sales were
prohibited by s supposed statute. Priv.Acts, N.C. 1887, c. 113,
§ 8. The defendant, under the plea of not guilty, claimed that
the statute cited was void because it had no enacting clause --
that is the words "The General Assembly of North Carolina do
enact." The court, referring in its opinion to the constitutional
provision that "the style of the acts shall be,
The General
Assembly of North Carolina do enact,'" Art. 2, § 21, and to
the provision that
"all bills and resolutions of a legislative nature shall be read
three times in each house, before they pass into laws, and shall be
signed by the presiding officers of both houses,"
Art. 2, § 23, held that the statute under which the
prosecution was inaugurated was not a law. The court, among other
things, said:
"It thus appears that its framers and the people who ratified it
deemed such provisions wise and important, the purpose being to
require every legislative act of the legislature to purport and
import upon its face to have been enacted by the General Assembly,
and to be further authenticated by the signatures of the presiding
officers of the two houses comprising that body. The purpose of
thus prescribing an enacting clause -- 'the style of the acts' --
is to establish the act -- to give it permanence, uniformity, and
certainty -- to identify the act of legislation as of the General
Assembly to afford evidence of its legislative, statutory nature,
and to secure uniformity of identification, and thus prevent
inadvertence, possible mistake, and fraud. Such purpose is
important of itself, and as it is of the Constitution, a due
observance of it is essential. The manner of the enactment of a
statute is of its substance. This is so in the nature of the
matter, as well as because the Constitution makes it so. "
Page 180 U. S. 517
After the decision in
State v. Patterson, rendered, as
above stated, before the bonds in suit were issued, it might have
been anticipated that the same court would hold, as they did in the
subsequent cases above cited, that the entering of the yea and nay
vote on the second and third readings of an act of the class
mentioned in section 14 of Article 2 of the state constitution was
a condition precedent that could not be dispensed with under any
circumstances.
The defendants, however, contend that, by the decisions of the
Supreme Court of North Carolina, as those decisions stood at the
time the bonds were issued, a person consulting the laws of the
state was not bound to examine the journals of the legislature and
ascertain at his peril whether such acts had been passed in the
particular manner prescribed by the Constitution; that everyone
could properly assume that the Act of February 20, 1879, signed by
the proper officers, and enrolled and published as one of the
statutes of the state, was passed in conformity with the
constitutional provision as to the entry on the journal of the yea
and nay vote on the second and third readings of a bill.
The North Carolina cases cited by the defendants in support of
this proposition are
Brodnax v. Groom, 64 N.C. 244 (1870);
Gatlin v. Tarboro, 78 N.C. 119 (1878), and
Scarborough
v. Robinson, 81 N.C. 409 (1879). Let us see what was involved
in those cases.
In
Brodnax v. Groom, it was held that the courts could
not go behind an enrolled act, duly certified by the presiding
officers of the two houses of assembly, to ascertain whether there
had been a compliance with the 12th section of Article 2 of the
state constitution, providing that the
"General Assembly shall not pass any private law unless it shall
be made to appear that thirty days' notice of application to pass
such a law shall have been given, under such direction and in such
manner as shall be provided by law."
In
Gatlin v. Tarboro, the question was as to the
validity of a tax levied by a town, which was resisted on the
ground that the act was private and had been passed without any
notice of the application as required by the constitution
Page 180 U. S. 518
(Art. 2, § 12), and was therefore void, the parties
admitting that no such notice was given. The court said:
"As to the second point: if it appeared from the act itself, or
affirmatively appeared by the journals of the legislature, which
would have been competent evidence, that the notice of the intended
application for the act, which the Constitution requires, had not
been given, we should probably hold the act void. We have not
consulted the journals. That was evidence to be offered in the
court below. Probably they are silent as to the fact whether it
appeared that the required notice had been given or not. In that
case, we think the presumption would be that the legislature had
obeyed the constitution, and that it appeared to it that the notice
had been given.
Omnia proesumuntur rite esse acta. We
cannot accept the agreement of the parties that no notice was in
fact given as proof that it did not appear to the legislature that
the required notice had been given. In such a case, the best and
only proof is by the record. Our opinion on this point is supported
by a recent decision in Illinois.
Happel v. Brethauer, 70
Ill. 166. If any weight were allowed to admissions of this sort,
the law might change as each case was presented. Our opinion on
this point renders it unnecessary to determine whether the act was
technically a public or private one."
In
Scarborough v. Robinson, the issue presented was as
to the power of the court to compel the presiding officers of the
two houses to sign an act to the end that it might be
authenticated, it being alleged that the bill had been duly
ratified by the two houses as shown by their respective journals.
That case arose under section 23 of Article 2 of the state
constitution, providing that all bills and resolutions of a
legislative nature should be read three times in each house before
they pass into laws, "and shall be signed by the presiding officers
of both houses." Preliminary to the decision of the question really
involved in that case, the court made some general observations
upon the question whether the existence and validity of a statute
should depend
"upon the uncertain results of an inquiry made in each
particular case, whether the provisions of the constitution
directing the mode of legislative proceedings have been followed in
the action of the two houses in passing a bill through
Page 180 U. S. 519
its different stages of progress."
But it was added that the determination of that question was not
necessary to a decision of the application before the court. It was
then decided, and nothing more was decided than, that
"the signatures of the presiding officers of the two houses,
under and by force of the words used in our constitution, are an
essential prerequisite to the existence of the statute -- the
finishing and perfecting act of legislation -- and must be affixed
during the session of the General Assembly."
Upon that ground only, the application for a mandamus was
denied.
It thus appears that no one of the cases cited by defendants
involved a construction of section 14 of Article 2 of the state
constitution. Those cases arose under other provisions of the
constitution. It is true that in
Scarborough v. Robinson,
there are general expressions touching questions adverted to but
not decided that lend apparent support to the contention that the
North Carolina decisions rendered after the issuing of the bonds in
suit were not in all particulars in harmony with what was said by
the state court in prior cases. But such general expressions as to
matters expressly excluded from decision are not authority, and
reference must be had to the points in judgment.
In view of the cases determined by the highest court of North
Carolina involving the precise point now under consideration, was
the circuit court of the United States justified in holding the
acts of 1868, 1879, and 1881 to be laws of the state? Observe that
the issue is not as to the construction, meaning, or scope of a
statute, but whether that which purports to be a legislative
enactment ever became a law for any purpose. May a federal court
disregard the decisions of the highest court of the state holding
that such enactment, in the form of a statute, was never passed so
as to become, under the state constitution, a law?
These questions have been so distinctly answered by this Court
in cases heretofore decided that a discussion of them upon
principle is unnecessary.
In
Town of South Ottawa v. Perkins, 94 U. S.
260,
94 U. S.
267-268, which was an action upon municipal bonds, the
question was
Page 180 U. S. 520
whether any such statute ever existed as that, under the
authority of which the bonds there in suit purported to have been
issued. It was contended that as the bonds were held by a
bona
fide purchaser for value, and as the town sued had paid the
first installment of interest, it was estopped from offering any
evidence that the act under the authority of which the bonds
purported to have been issued was not legally passed, the same
having been duly published among the printed statutes as a law, and
being therefore
prima facie as valid law -- in other
words, that, although the act might not have been duly passed, the
town, under the circumstances of the case, was estopped from
denying its passage. This Court said:
"We cannot assent to this view. There can be no estoppel in the
way of ascertaining the existence of a law. That which purports to
be a law of a state is a law, or it is not a law, according as the
truth of the fact may be, and not according to the shifting
circumstances of parties. It would be an intolerable state of
things if a document purporting to be an act of the legislature
could thus be a law in one case and for one party, and not a law in
another case and for another party; a law today, and not a law
tomorrow; a law in one place, and not a law in another in the same
state. And whether it be a law or not a law is a judicial question
to be settled and determined by the courts and judges. The doctrine
of estoppel is totally inadmissible in the case. It would be a very
unseemly state of things, after the courts of Illinois have
determined that a pretended statute of that state is not such,
having never been constitutionally passed, for the courts of the
United States, with the same evidence before them, to hold
otherwise."
As a matter of propriety and right, the decision of the state
courts on the question as to what are the laws of the state is
binding upon those of the United States. But the law under
consideration has been passed upon by the Supreme Court of
Illinois, and held to be invalid. This ought to have been
sufficient to have governed the action of the court below. In our
judgment, it was not necessary to have raised an issue on the
subject, except by demurrer to the declaration. The court is bound
to know the law without taking the advice of a jury on the subject.
When once it became the settled construction of the
Constitution
Page 180 U. S. 521
of Illinois that no act can be deemed a valid law unless, by the
journals of the legislature, it appears to have been regularly
passed by both houses, it became the duty of the courts to take
judicial notice of the journal entries in that regard. The courts
of Illinois may decline to take that trouble unless parties bring
the matter to their attention, but, on general principles, the
question as to the existence of a law is a judicial one, and must
be so regarded by the courts of the United States.
These principles were reaffirmed in
Post v. Supervisors
(Amoskeag Bank v. Ottawa), 105 U. S. 667.
It is said, however, that the circuit court of the United States
could not have followed the cases referred to in the certified
questions without departing from the principles announced by this
Court in
Field v. Clark, 143 U. S. 649,
143 U. S.
671-672. This point deserves examination.
In the present case, the express mandate of the Constitution of
North Carolina is that
"no law shall be passed . . . to impose any tax upon the people
of the state, or allow the counties, cities, or towns to do so
unless the bill for that purpose shall have been read three several
times in each house of the General Assembly, and passed three
several readings, which readings shall have been on three different
days, and agreed to by each house respectively, and unless the yeas
and nays on the second and third readings of the bill shall have
been entered on the journal."
Whether the absence from the journal of entries showing the
required number of readings of a bill on three different days will
be notice to all that the legislature has not conformed to the
requirements of the constitution in respect of such readings is a
question that need not be decided in this case. As the state
constitution does not expressly require those facts to be entered
on the journal of legislative proceedings, it may be that, when an
enrolled bill, certified and duly authenticated by the presiding
officers of the two houses, is approved by the governor, it is to
be conclusively presumed that the constitution was complied with as
to the mere readings of the bill. Without, however, expressing any
opinion on that question, we remark that no such conclusive
presumption can arise to defeat the express constitutional
Page 180 U. S. 522
inhibition upon the passage of an act authorizing a county,
city, or town to impose taxes upon its people unless "the yeas and
nays on the second and third readings of the bill shall have been
entered on the journal." The object of that provision was to make
such an entry on the journal a condition precedent to any
legislation imposing taxes on the people. Everyone who took
municipal bonds to be paid by means of taxation authorized by the
legislature was bound to know, from the face of the constitution,
that there was a want of power to issue such bonds and to impose
such taxation if the yeas and nays on the second and third readings
of the bill were not entered on the journal. The constitutional
requirement in that matter could not be dispensed with by the act
of the presiding officers of the two houses of the General Assembly
in certifying a bill as passed when the journal did not contain
entries showing that to have been done which was necessary to be
done before there was power to enact the bill into a law. These are
the grounds upon which the Supreme Court of North Carolina have
rested their decisions in the cases referred to in the first of the
certified questions.
The case of
Field v. Clark, 143 U.
S. 649,
143 U. S.
671-672, was altogether different. In that case it was
contended that a certain enrolled act of Congress in the custody of
the Secretary of State, and appearing upon its face to have become
a law in the mode prescribed by the Constitution of the United
States, was to be deemed a nullity in all its parts because it was
shown by the congressional record of proceedings, reports of
committees of each House, and other papers printed by authority of
Congress, that a section of the bill as it finally passed was not
in the bill authenticated by the signatures of the presiding
officers of the respective Houses of Congress and approved by the
President. The clause of the Constitution upon which that
contention was based declares that
"each House shall keep a journal of its proceedings, and from
time to time publish the same, excepting such parts as may in their
judgment require secrecy, and the yeas and nays of the members of
either House on any question shall at the desire of one fifth of
those present, be entered on the journal."
Art. I, § 5. It was not claimed in that case that a yea and
nay vote was demanded by one fifth of the members of either House
on the passage of the
Page 180 U. S. 523
section alleged to have been omitted, or on the passage of the
bill as approved by the two House of Congress. This Court said:
"In regard to certain matters, the Constitution expressly
requires that they shall be entered on the journal. To what extent
the validity of legislative action may be affected by the failure
to have those matters entered on the journal we need not inquire.
No such question is presented for determination. But it is clear
that, in respect to the particular mode in which, or with what
fulness, shall be kept the proceedings of either House relating to
matters not expressly required to be entered on the journals;
whether bills, orders, resolutions, reports, and amendments shall
be entered at large on the journal, or only referred to and
designated by their titles or by numbers -- these and like matters
were left to the discretion of the respective Houses of Congress.
Nor does any clause of that instrument, either expressly or by
necessary implication, prescribe the mode in which the fact of the
original passage of a bill by the House of Representatives and the
Senate shall be authenticated, or preclude Congress from adopting
any mode to that end which its wisdom suggests. Although the
Constitution does not expressly require bills that have passed
Congress to be attested by the signatures of the presiding officers
of the two Houses, usage, the orderly conduct of legislative
proceedings, and the rules under which the two bodies have acted
since the organization of the government, require that mode of
authentication."
It was then said:
"The signing by the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and
by the President of the Senate, in open session, of an enrolled
bill, is an official attestation by the two Houses of such bill as
one that has passed Congress. It is a declaration by the two
Houses, through their presiding officers, to the President, that a
bill thus attested has received, in due form, the sanction of the
legislative branch of the government, and that it is delivered to
him in obedience to the constitutional requirement that all bills
which pass Congress shall be presented to him. And when a bill thus
attested receives his approval and is deposited in the public
archives, its authentication as a bill that has passed Congress
should be deemed complete and unimpeachable. As the President has
no authority
Page 180 U. S. 524
to approve a bill not passed by Congress, an enrolled act in the
custody of the Secretary of State, and having the official
attestations of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, of the
President of the Senate, and of the President of the United States,
carries on its face a solemn assurance by the legislative and
executive departments of the government, charged, respectively with
the duty of enacting and executing the laws, that it was passed by
Congress. The respect due to coequal and independent departments
requires the judicial department to act upon that assurance, and to
accept as having passed Congress all bills authenticated in the
manner stated, leaving the courts to determine, when the question
properly arises, whether the act, so authenticated, is in
conformity with the Constitution."
So that, in
Field v. Clark, the question substantially
as now presented -- namely, as to the effect upon legislation of
the failure to enter upon the journals that which is expressly
required by the state constitution to be entered on them before an
act can become a law -- was not decided, but was in terms reserved
from decision. Nothing said in that case conflicts with the
judgment of the Supreme Court of North Carolina in the cases
cited.
To avoid misapprehension, it may be well to add that, even if
the decisions in North Carolina rested upon grounds inconsistent
with the principles announced in
Field v. Clark as
applicable to the constitutional provisions relating to acts passed
by Congress, it would be the duty of a federal court to follow the
rulings of the highest court of a state on the question whether a
particular enactment found in the printed statutes had been passed
in such a manner as to become, under its Constitution, a law of the
state. Whether a different principle would apply in cases where
rights had accrued under a statute previously adjudged by the state
court to have been so passed as to become a law we need not now
inquire.
It is, however, earnestly contended that the county cannot
escape liability even if the acts of 1868, 1879, and 1881 are
disregarded as not having been passed so as to become laws; that
the recital in each bond that it was issued under the
Page 180 U. S. 525
authority of the act of 1879 does not estop the holders of bonds
from showing that there was in fact ample authority to issue them,
although such authority was not recited in the bonds. This
contention rests mainly upon
Anderson County v. Beal,
113 U. S. 227,
113 U. S.
236-238 (1885). In that case, it was said:
"It is not disputed that the recital in the bond that it was
issued under the act of February 26, 1866, Sess.Laws of Kansas,
1866, c. 24, p. 72, was an error. . . . It is very clear that there
was legislative authority under the act of 1869 for the issuing of
the bonds in question. There was an election, and the requisite
majority of those who voted assented to the proposition for the
subscription to the stock and the issue of the bonds, and the
subscription was made by the proper officers, and they issued the
bonds. . . . The bond recites the wrong act, but if that part of
the recital be rejected, there remains the statement that the bond
'is executed and issued' 'in pursuance to the vote of the electors
of Anderson County of September 13, 1869.' The act of 1869 provides
that, when the assent of a majority of those voting at the election
is given to the subscription to the stock, the county commissioners
shall make the subscription, and shall pay for it, and for the
stock thereby agreed to be taken, by issuing to the company the
bonds of the county."
To the same effect is
Knox County v. Ninth National
Bank, 147 U. S. 91.
The point here made is not specifically embraced in either of
the certified questions, but it is so closely connected with the
question whether the circuit court should have followed the
decisions of the Supreme Court of North Carolina in
Bank v.
Commissioners, Commissioners v. Snuggs, Rodman v. Washington,
Commissioners of Wilkes County v. Call, and
Commissioners
v. Payne, above cited, that it ought to be examined.
Of course, if there was an absolute want of power to issue the
bonds in question, every purchaser of them would be charged with
notice of that fact, and could not look to the county in whose name
they were issued. So that the inquiry must be whether the county
had power to issue the bonds without the aid of any act passed
after the Constitution of 1868 went into operation.
Page 180 U. S. 526
The plaintiffs insist that requisite authority was given by the
convention ordinance of March 9, 1868, and that it had been in
effect so decided by the supreme court of the state before the
bonds were issued in
Hill v. Commissioners, 67 N.C. 367
(1870), and
Belo v. Commissioners, 76 N.C. 489 (1877).
In
Hill v. Commissioners, the relief sought was an
injunction to restrain the commissioners of Forsyth County -- into
which the first division of the railroad was to be constructed --
from imposing and collecting taxes to be applied in paying
installments due upon a subscription made by that county to the
stock of the North Western North Carolina Railroad Company. The
general question presented in that case, and the only one decided,
was whether the legislature could constitutionally authorize a
county to take stock in a railroad company under the sanction of a
popular vote, and impose a tax to pay for such subscription. The
supreme court of the state adjudged that such legislation would be
legal. No reference was made to the ordinance of 1868 or to the
ratifying Act of August 11, 1868. Nor does it appear from the
report of that case that any question was raised as to the validity
of that act under the 14th section of Article 2 of the constitution
of the state, nor that evidence was offered to show whether the
journals of the legislature contained any entry of the yea and nay
vote on the second and third readings of the bill. Still it must be
taken that the ordinance of 1868 was assumed by the court in that
case to be in force so far as Forsyth County, named in it, was
concerned. The decision cannot, however, be regarded as
authoritative upon the question whether Wilkes County had power,
under that ordinance alone, to issue the bonds here involved.
In
Belo v. Commissioners, the relief sought was a
judgment compelling the commissioners of Forsyth County to provide
for the payment of the bonds issued by them in payment of its
subscription of stock to the North Western North Carolina Railroad
Company. The supreme court of the state said:
"The North Western North Carolina Railroad Company was
incorporated by an ordinance of the Convention of 1868, and, by
section 12 of the charter, the same power to subscribe to the
capital stock of the company and subject to the like
Page 180 U. S. 527
regulations and restrictions is given to counties and towns as
was conferred by an act incorporating the Atlantic & North
Carolina Railroad Company, passed by the legislature of 1852. By
section 34 of the latter act, the justices of the county through or
near which the road was located, 'a majority concurring,' are
authorized to fix upon a subscription sum and submit it to the
voters of the county. If the majority favored subscription, the
justices were to choose an agent to subscribe the stock voted and
to prepare and issue county bonds, as the justices should direct.
The minutes of the special term of the County Court of Forsyth
County, which ordered the proposition to be submitted to the
popular vote, recite that a majority of the justices were present,
concurring in the order. The vote resulted in favor of
subscription, and was so certified to the succeeding court, held in
June, 1868. The minutes of that term recite that thirty-five
justices were present, which number is admitted to be a majority of
the whole number. At this latter term of the court, the justices
ordered the subscription to be made to the capital stock of the
company, and the bonds to be prepared and issued and sold by the
agent then chosen. The bonds were accordingly put upon the market,
and among them the identical bonds now sued on were by the agent
sold to one Lemly at his banking house in Salem, on the 5th of
March, 1869. These bonds recite that they were"
"authorized by an ordinance of 1868, by an order of the Court of
Pleas and Quarter Sessions of Forsyth County at June term, 1868,
and reenacted and ratified and confirmed by an act of the General
Assembly, ratified the 11th of August, 1868."
"At the same term at which the subscription was made, the
justices assessed a special tax upon the county to meet the
semi-annual interest on the bonds. This special railroad tax was
annually assessed, levied, and collected and applied in the
discharge of the accruing interest upon the bonds from that time
until 1872. A certificate for the stock subscribed was issued by
the railroad company to the county, which it yet holds; an agent
was annually chosen to represent, and did represent the county
stock in all the meetings of the company. Under the new state
constitution of 1868, a board of county commissioners succeeded to
all the powers and
Page 180 U. S. 528
duties of the justices, and up to 1872 this board unanimously
caused the levy and collection of the railroad tax and its
application to the discharge of the coupons due upon the bonds. But
the board elected in 1872 refused to assess any further tax and to
pay any further interest upon the bonds, alleging as the reason
therefor that the subscription of stock so made by the county was
illegal and void."
Again:
"For whether conditions precedent have been complied with is a
matter of fact to be determined by some tribunal invested with the
power and authority to decide it, and the decision when made should
be final. It is not disputed that the power to make the
subscription of stock and issue the bonds was conferred upon the
County of Forsyth by the ordinance of the convention. It is equally
clear that the tribunal which was authorized to issue the bonds
only on compliance with conditions precedent was the sole tribunal
to determine the fact whether the conditions had been fulfilled. In
our case, the justices of the county, a majority concurring, was
the court or tribunal designated to carry the law into effect, and
was the tribunal to decide whether the conditions had been complied
with, and their decision is final in a suit by a
bona fide
holder of the bonds against the municipality."
After considering the rights of the parties under the convention
ordinance of 1868, the court proceeded:
"So far, as to the rights of the parties under the original act
of the railroad corporation, granted by the convention of 1868. But
the plaintiff further relies upon a subsequent act of the
legislature, ratified the 11th of August, 1868, which confirms the
original charter [ordinance] of March, 1868. This act in express
terms 'ratifies all acts and things heretofore done under the
provisions of said ordinance,' and confers upon the"
"Board of Commissioners of the county full power and authority
to levy from time to time such tax as may be sufficient to pay the
subscription made by said county to the capital stock of the North
Western North Carolina Railroad Company and any interest due
thereon, or to liquidate any debt created by the county in
borrowing money to pay such stock subscription."
"The competency of the legislature to enact retrospective
statutes to
Page 180 U. S. 529
validate an irregular or defective execution of power by a
county corporation is well settled."
The court then declared that the ratifying Act of August 11,
1868, was a curative act and validated both the county subscription
and the issue of the bonds, if any defects existed therein.
What was said in the
Belo case about the validity of
the Act of August 11, 1868, as a curative statute, within the power
of the legislature to pass, cannot be deemed as an adjudication
upon the question whether that act was void upon the ground that
the yeas and nays on the second and third readings of the bill were
not entered on the journal. It does not appear that any such
question was presented or considered, or that the journals of the
legislature were in evidence or proved so that the question could
have been decided.
But the
Belo case involved other considerations.
Forsyth County -- whose liability on the bonds in suit in that case
was directly involved -- made the point that it had no authority to
issue such bonds. The court, however, held that such authority was
conferred by the convention ordinance of March 9, 1868, and the
subscription and bonds made in the name of that county to the North
Western North Carolina Railroad Company were upheld as valid under
that ordinance, which was recognized as part of the law of the
state and as conferring authority on the County of Forsyth to do
what it did.
It results that when the bonds here in question were issued in
1889, it was the law of North Carolina that the ordinance of 1868,
constituting the charter of the North Western North Carolina
Railroad Company, was not superseded by the Constitution of 1868,
but was in force, and therefore gave power to counties embraced by
its provisions to take stock in that company and pay for it in
county bonds just as Forsyth County had done.
Whether Wilkes County was so situated with reference to the
contemplated road that it could be said to have had the same
authority as was given to Forsyth County is a question not now
decided.
In this connection, we must allude to what was said in
Commissioners of Wilkes County v. Call, 123 N.C. 308, 317
(1898).
Page 180 U. S. 530
That was a suit brought by the commissioners of Wilkes County
against the county treasurer to test the validity of the bonds
issued in the name of that county to pay its subscription to the
stock of the North Western North Carolina Railroad Company. No
holder of bonds was made party to the original suit. In the
progress of the case, however, two persons who became owners of one
bond after the institution of the action were permitted to
intervene. The supreme court of the state said:
"We have not overlooked the fact that, in
Belo v.
Commissioners, 76 N.C. 489, this court strongly intimates that
section 12 of the charter did confer the authority given in section
33 of the act of 1852 [incorporating the Atlantic & North
Carolina Railroad Company]; but it does so incidentally and with
little discussion, because it was not denied in the pleadings. This
was not the determining point in the case, which turned chiefly
upon the recitals in the bonds and the ratifying act of 1868. This
is clearly shown in the opinion itself, which devotes four pages to
the discussion of equitable estoppel arising on the recitals, and
about half a page to the possible binding effect of the ordinance,
winding up with the significant sentence on page 497 that, 'as the
case is presented to us, that question does not arise, and we do
not decide it.' There is some ground for holding that the
question which the court said was neither presented nor decided was
whether the"
"justices could have been compelled by process of law to make
the subscription unless in defense they could have shown that the
election was not fairly conducted, but was influenced by the fraud
of the railroad company."
"Whether this be a correct interpretation of the opinion in the
Belo case or not is immaterial, for that the ordinance of
1868 gave power to Forsyth County to make the subscription and
issue bonds in payment of it was expressly affirmed in that case --
indeed, it was not there disputed. So far from the
Belo
case turning, in part, upon the ratifying act of 1868, the court
distinctly adjudged that the bonds were valid in the hands of
bona fide holders under the ordinance of 1868 without the
aid of the Act of August 11, 1868."
A further reference must be made to the
Call case. It
was there said (p. 320) that
"the ratification of the constitution on
Page 180 U. S. 531
the 24th day of April, 1868, when it went into effect for all
domestic purposes, annulled all special powers remaining unexecuted
and not granted in strict accordance with its requirements."
This view was again expressed in
Commissioners v.
Payne, 123 N.C. 432, 486-7. By Article 7, section 7, of the
state constitution it was provided that
"no county, city, town, or other municipal corporation shall
contract any debt, pledge its faith, or loan its credit, nor shall
any tax be levied or collected by any officers of the same, except
for the necessary expenses thereof, unless by a vote of the
majority of the qualified voters therein."
If the state court intended to adjudge in the
Call and
Payne cases that no municipal subscription to the stock of
a railroad company could be made after the constitution of 1868
took effect except in conformity to section 7 of Article 7, we
perceive no reason to doubt the correctness of such interpretation
of that instrument, for it could not be that any unexecuted
provision of the ordinance of 1868 inconsistent with the state
constitution could be executed.
Aspinwall
v. Commissioners, 22 How. 364;
Wadsworth v.
Supervisors, 102 U. S. 534,
102 U. S. 537;
Norton v. Brownsville, 129 U. S. 479,
129 U. S. 490.
But if it was intended to say that the state constitution abrogated
all authority previously given to make such municipal
subscriptions, and that no such subscriptions could be made except
pursuant to a new statute passed in conformity with the
requirements of section 14 of Article 2, we are constrained to say
that such a rule could not be applied in this case so as to violate
any rights which the plaintiff had under the law of North Carolina
as declared by the highest court of the state before the bonds here
involved were issued. It is the settled doctrine of this Court
"that the question arising in a suit in a federal court of the
power of a municipal corporation to make negotiable securities is
to be determined by the law as judicially declared by the highest
court of the state when the securities were issued, and that the
rights and obligations of parties accruing under such a state of
the law would not be affected by a different course of judicial
decisions subsequently rendered any more than by subsequent
legislation."
Loeb v. Trustees of Columbia Township, 179 U.
S. 472,
179 U. S. 492,
and authorities there cited.
Page 180 U. S. 532
We have referred fully to the
Hill and
Belo
cases because of the earnest contention of learned counsel that,
under the law of North Carolina as declared in those cases before
the bonds in question were made, the ordinance of 1868, without the
aid of subsequent legislation, gave full power to Wilkes County to
issue such bonds. This view suggests various questions as to the
scope and effect of that ordinance. Assuming, as we must, that the
Belo and
Hill cases held that the ordinance of
1868 remained in force after the adoption of the constitution, did
the general power given by that ordinance to the North Western
Railroad Company to construct a railroad from its eastern terminus,
"running by way of Salem and Winston, in Forsyth County, to some
point in the northwestern boundary line of the state,
to be
hereafter determined," invest Wilkes County with authority to
subscribe to the stock of the company and to issue bonds in payment
of such subscription? Was Wilkes County in the same category with
Forsyth County? Was the route of the road northwest of Salem and
Winston to some point in the northwestern boundary line of the
state to be determined by the legislature or by the company? If by
the legislature, was that route ever determined otherwise than by
the act of 1879, which has been adjudged never to have become a law
of the state? Did Wilkes County have authority, under the ordinance
of 1868 alone, to aid, by a subscription of stock and bonds, the
construction of the second division of the road referred to in the
act of 1879, extending from the towns of Winston and Salem, up the
valley of the Yadkin by way of Jonesville and Wilkesboro, in the
County of Wilkes, to Patterson's Factory, in the County of
Caldwell?
These are matters about which we do not feel disposed to express
an opinion under the very general and indefinite questions
certified from the circuit court of appeals. Nor do we deem it
proper to express any opinion as to the scope and the effect upon
the rights of the parties of sections 1996, 1997, 1998, and 1999 of
the Code of North Carolina. The certified questions do not directly
or explicitly relate to any question arising under those sections
of the Code, and it is not appropriate that this
Page 180 U. S. 533
Court should, under the questions certified, consider and
determine the entire merits of the case.
We answer the certified questions to this extent:
1. That the circuit court of the United States should have
regarded the decisions of the Supreme Court of North Carolina in
Bank v. Commissioners, Commissioners v. Snuggs, Rodman v.
Washington, Commissioners of Wilkes County v. Call, and
Commissioners v. Payne, above cited, as controlling upon
the inquiry whether the legislative enactments of 1868, 1879, and
1881 were passed
in such manner as to become, under the
Constitution, laws of the state.
2. That the rights of the parties in this case are determinable
by the law of the state as it was declared by the state court to be
at the time the bonds here involved were made in the name of the
county and put upon the market.
These answers will be certified to the circuit court of
appeals.